Excessive UBE3A dosage impairs retinoic acid signaling and synaptic plasticity in autism spectrum disorders

Xingxing Xu(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Chuanyin Li(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaobo Gao(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kun Xia(Central South University), Hui Guo(Central South University), Yali Li(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Zijian Hao(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lei Zhang(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Daming Gao(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Chenfan Xu(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Huatai Xu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhi‐Qi Xiong(Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology), Zilong Qiu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ling Mei(Medical College of Wisconsin), Xiaoduo Xie(Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science), Kangcheng Ruan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ronggui Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Cell Research
October 27, 2017
Cited by 130Open Access
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Abstract

The autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are a collection of human neurological disorders with heterogeneous etiologies. Hyperactivity of E3 ubiquitin (Ub) ligase UBE3A, stemming from 15q11-q13 copy number variations, accounts for 1%-3% of ASD cases worldwide, but the underlying mechanisms remain incompletely characterized. Here we report that the functionality of ALDH1A2, the rate-limiting enzyme of retinoic acid (RA) synthesis, is negatively regulated by UBE3A in a ubiquitylation-dependent manner. Excessive UBE3A dosage was found to impair RA-mediated neuronal homeostatic synaptic plasticity. ASD-like symptoms were recapitulated in mice by overexpressing UBE3A in the prefrontal cortex or by administration of an ALDH1A antagonist, whereas RA supplements significantly alleviated excessive UBE3A dosage-induced ASD-like phenotypes. By identifying reduced RA signaling as an underlying mechanism in ASD phenotypes linked to UBE3A hyperactivities, our findings introduce a new vista of ASD etiology and facilitate a mode of therapeutic development against this increasingly prevalent disease.


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